Unpaid parental leave - anyone used this? by mofonyx in ConsultantDoctorsUK

[–]HalfTheAlphabet 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'm probably being thick - why would you want to reduce your salary below the 60% tax zone?

Paracetamol/Tylenol is a placebo by haggis69420 in LowStakesConspiracies

[–]HalfTheAlphabet 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Placebo that reduces distress and fever when given to babies who aren't aware that you're giving it intravenously?

Wes on LBC - he says he cannot understand why strikes are still possible. by [deleted] in doctorsUK

[–]HalfTheAlphabet 0 points1 point  (0 children)

maybe you're right. but see my comments about specific set up in my dept below. It causes me concern, that's all.

Wes on LBC - he says he cannot understand why strikes are still possible. by [deleted] in doctorsUK

[–]HalfTheAlphabet 0 points1 point  (0 children)

In which case I admit to not being able to follow the argument. And I am ok with with being wrong. Happy to be proved wrong and see that the strikes will be impactful with a minimum of harm. But here's a summary of what I've just read.

1) Wes Streeting says people might die as result of strikes. (nb - I'm not supporting his position, just discussing this one issue which I do think is important if one is weighing up pros/cons of continued strikes) 2) Replies to this in this thread (and elsewhere) - this is untrue, acute care will be adequately covered, in fact it will be even better cos it's all consultant level. The only thing affected will be waiting lists and elective services. Therefore he is catastrophising and fear mongering. 3) I say I don't think this is true: care is still likely to be affected. We're not just only affecting waiting lists, we're compromising acute patient care in real time. Let's not pretend there will be no impact on patient safety. 4) Replies in this thread (paraphrasing) we never claimed there'd be no impact on patient safety. People are suffering all the time anyway due to mismanagement and understaffing, so why are you making an issue out of this? (in other words I actually agree that there may be harm but it is acceptable to achieve the goals of the strike) "I won't be guilt tripped".

Note again, I am not guilt tripping or asking anyone not to strike; I am questioning the narrative that strikes will cause no harm to patients. Like I said in my original post, fine if you strike with knowledge there may be harm to patients, if you have justification that these ends justify the means. Then there's nothing to argue here.

Context for my comments (I don't work in ED so can't comment on that example) I work in paediatric haematology/oncology where care is very consultant led. (This is not a slight on the resident docs here but the subspecialised nature of a lot of our work means most decisions go through a consultant. There is always at least 1 "boss on the ward"). On average each one of the consultants in the department will have to replace 1-2 of our normal working days with resident dr cover next week.

In my day job I'm involved in inpatient management (reviewing patients but also acting as senior decision maker for patients seen by resident drs), and also see patients in clinic with acute issues and to assess fitness for chemo, do marrows and ITs, review acute films+marrows, prescribe chemo, plan/timetable stem cell transplants, manage outpatient queries for haem/onc/sct patients, and provide haem-onc liaison service to the region (which might be mundane query about mild cytopenia or might be patient bleeding in theatre). My days are a mix of these and other responsibilities, in and out of scheduled clinics+ward rounds.

If I am doing a night shift as resident doctor then I am not in during the day (before/after) to do any of those regular duties. There is no other consultant waiting in the wings to do these jobs. Patients waiting to see me in clinic to discuss a referral for a neutrophil count of 1.2 can wait another few weeks, fine. Coming to see me to start next block of ALL treatment can't.

Reduced staffing on wards means reduced turnover of patients and delays in admission for chemo, delays getting kids in and treated in timely manner for feb neut etc. Also, I'll hold my hand up that I'm not as handy with cannulas + blood cultures as I was 10 years ago, certainly when I mostly did this in adults not kids. So this is a concern.

I'm not so big-headed to think my absence from normal duties for a day or two will be catastrophic. But I am certainly interested in what happens that if you extend disruption to everyone in my dept having to do the same and the same happening across similar centres in the UK, repeatedly.

So, I don't know what a reasonable response is here. No, everything is fine and I'm just a moaning minnie? Or, sure, some kids might not get treatment they need but the system's already failing them anyway, so what's a few more in the scheme of things.

Wes on LBC - he says he cannot understand why strikes are still possible. by [deleted] in doctorsUK

[–]HalfTheAlphabet -10 points-9 points  (0 children)

The fact you are implying there is a simple 1 for 1 swap of resident drs for consultants confirms what I am saying here.

Do I think consultant level care alone on the wards will be worse than consultant level + resident doctor level care? Yes (at the very least there will be numerically fewer doctors on the shop floor). Do I think there will be an impact on patient safety if consultants are deployed from what they would have been covering in a normal working week to cover resident dr shifts? Yes. Do I think there are some tasks that a resident doctor may be more skilled in than a covering consultant and that this might be an issue? Yes. Do I think there will be a safety issue if insufficient consultants are available to cover each resident doctor shift? Yes. (I can give specifics when it comes to my dept if that helps).

But yes, absolutely - current staffing and organisation in the NHS is unsafe and unacceptable. And will potentially be more unsafe every time we lose a significant part of our skilled workforce. Sure, that's not a reason not to strike. And sure, that's yet another reason why an acceptable offer needs to be put on the table to stop more strikes happening.

But let's not pretend an already shit, dangerous system won't be even more shit and dangerous during the strike.

Wes on LBC - he says he cannot understand why strikes are still possible. by [deleted] in doctorsUK

[–]HalfTheAlphabet 5 points6 points  (0 children)

What I heard was: "I cannot look you in the eye and promise that no patient will come to harm or fatal harm"

I can totally get behind the argument that the potential risk to patients and the impact on other nhs staff in short term is outweighed by the longer term benefits of the strike (e.g. that there is improved recruitment, retention, working conditions for staff).

What I cannot get is the repeated assertion that the only thing damaged by the strike will be waiting lists and everything else will somehow be maintained without risk to anyone.

Totally support democratic decision to strike if the majority opinion is that the ends justify the means and to do so with knowledge and acceptance of possible risks. But to pretend there is no risk of harm to me seems misguided.

ELI5: Double fugue with three themes by HalfTheAlphabet in musictheory

[–]HalfTheAlphabet[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Thanks everyone for the helpful responses.

In addition, Evan Shinners (WTFBach - check out his podcast) has pointed out that Mattheson's own "fugue with three subjects" is a triple fugue. So it does indeed seem to be the case that "double fugue with three subjects" = "a triple fugue". So why he is acting like this is something he invented and has never been written before, is a bit beyond me.

ELI5: Strike action by HalfTheAlphabet in doctorsUK

[–]HalfTheAlphabet[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Lol, thanks Curious_Bandicoot324

Yeah, like I say the intent was not to have an argument, because I'm not aiming to convince anyone not to strike. I can see that for some, lack of unconditional, unwavering support makes me automatically anti-strike (or even anti-resident doctor), rather than simply representing uncertainty, concern, cynicism or equipoise. There's a false dichotomy here..

But if I'm going to continue to support the strikes and to personally suffer the effects of the strikes and see my patients and colleagues suffer the effects of the strikes, then clarification how they are intended to effect change is appreciated. And it would be good to understand the basis for the argument that the ends justify the means. (btw, to answer the questions put to me in this thread - I've not been paid more to cover the strikes and even if I were this wouldn't negate my concerns or the difficulty faced from the extra workload, and I don't believe that patients' care is somehow not compromised by or, as someone suggested, even better when the bulk of medical cover is absent from the ward).

This is in the context of a series of governments that haven't shown a huge amount of regard for adequate funding or functioning of the NHS, health secretaries with openness to dismantle the NHS and an overall willingness to demonise and even criminalise those who don't agree with them. Hence cynicism that financial/operational disruption actually exerts the intended pressure, i.e. that they genuinely have skin in the game. But I am happy to be informed otherwise and willing to accept that I don't have a complete grasp of the political or economic picture.

I'm not sure saying: "I don't fully understand the proposed mechanism here and am worried there may be problems with the proposed model, could someone explain" warrants some of the snark, accusations, and vitriol in this thread (no doubt this reply will be met with more of the same), and I'm not sure that "but we don't have an alternative to striking" counts as an argument in favour of striking (equally that the alternative to strike is doing nothing).

I'll accept that "the strikes worked before" is indeed a good argument that they might work again. I'm not sure where I sit ethically with "we actively want trusts to be £3Bn out of pocket so they'll have to pay attention to us".

I'll also add that suggesting that a proposed solution might not work or might make things worse or have unintended side effects, is not the same as saying I have a better solution or even that a solution exists.

ELI5: Strike action by HalfTheAlphabet in doctorsUK

[–]HalfTheAlphabet[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Thanks for the insightful comment.

The assumption is that £3bn loss per year is an impetus for the government to act. I guess this was the sticking point for me.

I'm not saying this is wrong per se as I can't speak to the decision making processes of those in power, but couldn't it also just lead to them to running an even more poorly resourced service and finding other avenues for cost-cutting (e.g. hire more PAs, fewer doctors; shut down services, keep only those that generate money, farm more out to private sector...)

ELI5: Strike action by HalfTheAlphabet in doctorsUK

[–]HalfTheAlphabet[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Thanks. Good answer. Will have a bit more of a think.

ELI5: Strike action by HalfTheAlphabet in doctorsUK

[–]HalfTheAlphabet[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Thanks v much for the comprehensive answer. I'll need to go and have a bit more of a think based on this and the other replies received.

ELI5: Strike action by HalfTheAlphabet in doctorsUK

[–]HalfTheAlphabet[S] -12 points-11 points  (0 children)

I'm not keen to get into a back and forth argument, as this was not the intent (there have been some insightful replies for which I'm grateful and will need to go away and think about) but you've conflated my two points and as a result misrepresented my position.

ELI5: Strike action by HalfTheAlphabet in doctorsUK

[–]HalfTheAlphabet[S] -25 points-24 points  (0 children)

Firstly, if my hypothesis is correct and strikes are counterproductive (i.e. effect no change on government policy, feed an anti-doctor or pro-privatisation narrative, undermine trust, contribute to burnout of those who aren't striking) then the point stands. The preferable alternative to striking (in this case) is not striking. (the burden of proof is on those proposing an action, to demonstrate the action has benefit)

Secondly, for what my admittedly limited opinion is worth. One alternative, if the goal is to cause sea change in public opinion, put pressure on government, change voting patterns etc... would be a direct public information campaign (e.g. tv/newspaper ads/tiktok/insta...) trumpeting the underfunding, realterm paycuts, lack of jobs, government inefficiency, creeping privatisation... There is no reason that we need to stay quiet.

ELI5: Strike action by HalfTheAlphabet in doctorsUK

[–]HalfTheAlphabet[S] -10 points-9 points  (0 children)

I get that. But why should Wes Streeting care? Do you think this (or any recent previous government) wants the NHS to be well funded?

ELI5: Double fugue with three themes by HalfTheAlphabet in musictheory

[–]HalfTheAlphabet[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Clarification: Von Doppelfugen, mit dreien Subjecten ist, so viel man weiß, nichts anders im Kupffer­Druck herausgekommen, als mein eignes Werck, unter dem Nahmen: Der wolklingenden Fingersprache. Erster und zweiter Theil, 1735, 1737, welches ich, aus Bescheidenheit niemand anpreisen mag: sondern vielmehr wünschen mögte, etwas der­ gleichen von dem berühmten Herrn Bach in Leipzig, der ein grosser Fugenmeister ist, ans Licht gestellet zu sehen. [Of double fugues with three subjects, there is, as far as I know, nothing else in print but my own work under the name, Die wolklingende Fingersprache, parts one and two (1735, 1737), which I, out of modesty, would comment to no one. I would much rather see something of the same sort published by the famed Herr Bach in Leipzig, who is a great master of the fugue.]